It was on my doorstep today. Literally. I came home from the car shop (oil change) and there were two large boxes on my doorstep with the words "steal me" printed on them. Er, actually the words "Dell." I don't quite have time to run the thing yet, but took a moment to open it up to see what's inside. Not too shabby...
The tower is nice and attractive. It doesn't scream "teh '377T g4m3r" but that's just fine. Drive bays are stealthed. The tower felt kind of light, and most of the weight seemed to be centered around the CPU/PSU area which is a good sign.
The CPU HSF is a radial style and has an 80x25mm fan on it. I don't know if it has a copper core (will find out when I start messing with it for real) but I'd imagine that there exists the possibility, since it's probably easier to have one HSF across the board than to have a "better" one for faster chips. The HSF is bolted down and doesn't use the unpopular push-pins.
The case is stamped steel and looks kind of like how cheap Foxconn mATX cases are made. I've seen a few styles and this chassis isn't like any of them, but the construction cues are there. Exhaust is a 92mm fan. There are two 5¼", one FDD and two HDD bays. The ventilation in the front looks to be phenominally good. Cabling was fairly tidy, with the extra power connectors already run to near the empty drive bays, a nice touch. There are 4 USB ports in the front of the case, behind a slip-down panel.
The PSU is a 300W Bestec with 18A on the single +12v rail. About what one could expect in such a system. It has just enough power plugs to be able to populate all the drive bays, with 4 SATA and one FDD power connector. Yup, no "regular" molex. I'm thinking if not loaded down with more drives, the PSU should be able to handle any PCI-E card that doesn't require additional power (the 6 pin PCI-E plug). I don't have anything to back up that statement though.
Don't know what HDD is in there (80GB SATA) since the label faces away, but looks to be a "slim" drive (skinnier than 1" thick). Optical drive is a regular SATA DVDROM.
The RAM is Hynix DDR2-667 standard latencies, two 512MB sticks in dual channel.
The motherboard is a Foxconn G33M02. The rear I/O area isn't very populated, with no legacy ports. There are 4 SATA ports and a FDD port, but no EIDE ports. It is kind of but not quite like the Foxconn G33M that is in the channel. IIRC the two PCI-E slots are reversed (16x-1x-PCI-PCI).